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08/20/2016 World photo/Mike Bonnicksen.Danzas Multiculturales entertain the crowd at the community wellness festival held Saturday at at Kiwanis Methow Park, in Wenatchee. The Trust for Public Land hosted the event and invited community members to share their ideas about renovations planned for the park, along with providing live music, dancing, education and art activities.

For imagining better parks, art works

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Some parts of park design–setting the right width for a walking path, using landscaping to prevent flooding—are more like a science. But creating a place that feels inspired? That’s an art.

That’s why The Trust for Public Land partners with artists to help neighbors get creative during the planning process. Before we break ground, we host months of block parties, brainstorming sessions, and other gatherings—often with more craft supplies than blueprints. Art fuels conversation, which pays off in the long run: after all, we know people are more likely to use and care for places they helped dream up themselves.

“When people hear ‘planning meeting,’ the first picture that comes to mind is someone at the front of a room in a suit pointing to a chart on a poster board,” says Terry Valdez, an artist we’re working with to remake parks in Wenatchee, Washington. “But when we include an art project at a meeting, suddenly people are talking to each other, helping each other, asking questions, sharing ideas—art can make planning a park a really fun, fruitful, organic experience.”

Here are just a few Trust for Public Land projects in the works with some extra artistic flair.

1. All aboard

At Southwark School in Philadelphia, a team from the Mural Arts Project invented a board game to help students, parents, and neighbors come up with ideas for the school’s future playground. It’s been described as a cross between Monopoly and Apples to Apples—with a park-themed board and fill-in-the-blank cards that prompt players to imagine the schoolyard of their dreams. Planners keep track of the game’s outcomes, and are incorporating suggestions generated through the game into the new playground’s design.

The board game that artists designed for Southwark School is like a cross between Monopoly and Apples to Apples, with a schoolyard twist that's all its own.Photo credit: Mural Arts Project

2. Drawing conclusions

In Wenatchee, an agricultural community in eastern Washington, Terry Valdez brings hands-on art projects to planning sessions for Kiwanis-Methow Park—an underused green space slated for a redesign. At one event, neighbors painted plastic flowers to brighten up the chain-link fence. Valdez says the best part about bringing art into the planning process is the broad appeal of getting creative. “You’ll see everyone from little kids to elderly folks showing each other what they’ve made,” Valdez says. “The mayor himself painted about more flowers than anybody—he kept saying he didn’t want to stop painting!”

Photo Credit: Adair Freeman Rutledge

3. Bundle up

San Francisco’s notorious fog isn’t the reason trees in Civic Center Plaza sported sweaters this summer: they’d been “yarn bombed” by artists Lorna and Jill Watt, who spent a few hours each week out knitting and chatting with curious passersby. Their project is called Knitting the Commons, and it’s part of an ongoing effort by The Trust for Public Land and the City of San Francisco to rethink and improve the vast, busy public space out front of City Hall. It’s an offbeat approach to gathering input into efforts to rethink this sometimes-maligned public space. “We’re catching people’s attention, that’s for sure,” says Lorna. “When they stop to ask what I’m doing, it’s a chance to fill them in and get them thinking about what changes they’d like to see here.”

Sister duo Lorna and Jill Watt created these colorful covers for trees in a bustling San Francisco neighborhood. The pair used more than 20 miles of yarn for the installation.Photo credit: The Trust for Public Land

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Working from more than 30 offices nationwide, The Trust for Public Land helps communities raise funds, conduct research and planning, acquire and protect land, and design and renovate parks, playgrounds, trails, and gardens.